Create an illustrated description of the answer to the question below. You may illustrate and narrate it or grab photos and quotes from the internet. The assembling of the page, however, into a cohesive story is uniquely your own. These will be shared with the class after everyone has completed it.
Submit as a jpeg or pdf via email.
Question: Where were earliest cities located in your country? Why do suppose they were located there? What were the trade routes of the ancient peoples in your country? What early cereal crops were grown in your country?
Māori grew crop plants that the first Polynesian settlers brought from tropical Polynesia.
Kūmara (sweet potato) was the main crop, and could be grown throughout the northern and coastal North Island, and in the northern South Island. Four other important food plants – taro, yam, gourd and tī pore (Pacific cabbage tree) – were confined to northern gardens.
Aute (paper mulberry) was grown for its fibre, which was made into tapa cloth. It seems to have been grown only in warm northern locations, and by the 1840s no longer grew in New Zealand.
You may illustrate and narrate it or grab photos and quotes from the internet.
The assembling of the page, however, into a cohesive story is uniquely your own.
These will be shared with the class after everyone has completed it.
Submit as a jpeg or pdf via email.
Question: Where were earliest cities located in your country? Why do suppose they were located there? What were the trade routes of the ancient peoples in your country? What early cereal crops were grown in your country?
This web site might be useful:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_by_time_of_continuous_habitation
Early Australia
Māori grew crop plants that the first Polynesian settlers brought from tropical Polynesia.
Kūmara (sweet potato) was the main crop, and could be grown throughout the northern and coastal North Island, and in the northern South Island. Four other important food plants – taro, yam, gourd and tī pore (Pacific cabbage tree) – were confined to northern gardens.
Aute (paper mulberry) was grown for its fibre, which was made into tapa cloth. It seems to have been grown only in warm northern locations, and by the 1840s no longer grew in New Zealand.
1st City in Modern Australia